NBC Reschedules New Series Quarterlife

NBC announces a new premiere date for its critically acclaimed Internet series &quot;quarterlife&quot; from Monday, February 18 to Tuesday, February 26 (10-11 p.m. ET) before it settles into its new regularly scheduled day and time of Sundays (9-10 p.m. ET) beginning March 2.

NBC Photo: Elisabeth Caren

NBC announces a new premiere date for its critically acclaimed Internet series &quot;quarterlife&quot; from Monday, February 18 to Tuesday, February 26 (10-11 p.m. ET) before it settles into its new regularly scheduled day and time of Sundays (9-10 p.m. ET) beginning March 2.

As a result, &quot;Monk&quot; and &quot;Psych,&quot; two hits from USA Network that were previously scheduled for their broadcast premiere on NBC on March 2 (9-11 p.m. ET), will now debut on Sunday, April 6 at 8-9 p.m. (ET) and 9-10 p.m. (ET), respectively.

Leading into the Tuesday premiere of &#39;quaurterlife&#39; will be the NBC hit unscripted series &#39;The Biggest Loser.&#39; &quot;&#39;The Biggest Loser,&#39; is one of the strongest shows on television right now among young viewers, especially young women, and we see this as a perfect opportunity to capture that audience with the highly anticipated broadcast premiere of &#39;quarterlife&#39;,&quot; said Vince Manze, President, NBC Program Planning, Scheduling and Strategy, NBC Universal. &quot;In addition, in its regular Sunday time period we&#39;re providing a young-skewing original scripted alternative in an hour where the competition will be mostly unscripted programming or encores.&quot;

The new series from Marshall Herskovitz and Edward Zwick — the creative team behind &quot;My So-Called Life,&quot; &quot;thirtysomething,&quot; &quot;Legends of the Fall,&quot; and &quot;Blood Diamond&quot; — &quot;quarterlife&quot; is the first network-quality series that was produced first for the Internet. Known for their incisive portrayals of relationships and experience during life&#39;s key passages, Herskovitz and Zwick take on the crucial years between 20 and 30 in &quot;quarterlife,&quot; when so many of life&#39;s important decisions are made. &quot;quarterlife&quot; tells the ongoing stories of six creative people in their twenties. As with Herskovitz and Zwick&#39;s earlier series, at the center of &quot;quarterlife&quot; is a commitment to realism and the recognition of universal human themes through the truthful depiction of the way young people speak, work, think, love, argue, and just have fun.

Starting with Dylan (Tulloch), a young woman whose overly truthful video blog (on quarterlife.com of course) spills the closest secrets of her friends, the show&#39;s characters – filmmakers Danny (Walton) and Jed (Foster), actress-bartender Lisa (Schwartz), geek-extraordinaire Andy (Christy), and still-tied-to-her-parents Debra (Lombardo) – chart the sometimes excruciating, sometimes comic, often emotional experiences that comprise coming of age in the 21st century. &quot;quarterlife&quot; is created and executive produced by Herskovitz and Zwick. The series is produced by longtime Herskovitz and Zwick associate, Josh Gummersall. Melanie Hall is chief operating officer of quarterlife.com.